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Pulsar P4 Time Computer with LED display ref. 3215-2 mens stainless steel watch circa 1975 Made in the USA A Pulsar LED watch from 1976. In 1970, Pulsar was a brand of the American Hamilton Watch Company which first announced that it was making and bringing the LED watch to market. It was developed jointly by American companies Hamilton and ...
Button, coin, or watch cells. A button cell, watch battery, or coin battery is a small battery made of a single electrochemical cell and shaped as a squat cylinder typically 5 to 25 mm (0.197 to 0.984 in) in diameter and 1 to 6 mm (0.039 to 0.236 in) high – resembling a button.
Used in some lighted watches and some LED decorator lights (electronic tea candles). CR1220: 5012LC: 35–40: 0.1 (CR) 0.03 (BR) 12.5 × 2.0 Used in keychain LED flashlights, and in some digital cameras to keep the time and date function running even when the main battery is taken out of the camera. [146] [147] CR1225: 5020LC: 50: 0.2: 12.5 × 2.5
2. Honey. This pantry staple could most likely see you age, move houses, retire, and turn gray — and it would still be good for eating. It literally lasts forever and doesn’t go bad.
The print will be personalized with their dog’s name, and it even comes framed, so all you have to do is wrap it up before putting it under the tree. $199 at Uncommon Goods Uncommon Goods
Wall Street was on track for marginal gains at Friday's open as traders increased bets on a Federal Reserve rate cut this month after the November payrolls report. U.S. job growth surged in ...
The change happens on a few seconds timescale, far faster than most pulsars. Despite being one of the first pulsars discovered, the mechanism for its unusual behavior is unknown. [9] In 2006, a research group from Peking University published a paper suggesting that the pulsar may actually be a low-mass quark star with mass around 0.02 M ☉. [11]
PSR B1620-26 b orbits a pair of stars.The primary star, PSR B1620-26, is a pulsar, a neutron star spinning at 100 revolutions per second, with a mass of 1.34 M ☉, a likely radius of around 20 kilometers (0.00003 R ☉) and a likely temperature less than or equal to 300,000 K.